Jobber: field service software, plans and verdict for 2026

Jobber is field service management software (scheduling, quoting, invoicing and payments in one app) for home-service businesses running anywhere from a solo operator to a roughly 15-person crew. Pricing runs across four published plans, from $29/month annual (Core, 1 user) to $399/month annual (Plus, up to 15 users), with a flat $29/mo fee per extra user on every plan.

Verified: July 2026, checked against Jobber's official pricing page. See how we research.

What Jobber replaces

Without software like this, running a home-service business usually means a paper calendar or a spreadsheet for scheduling, a separate tool for invoices, and a payment processor that doesn't talk to either one. Jobber puts the whole loop in one app: a customer requests work, you send a quote, you schedule the visit and dispatch a tech, then you invoice and collect payment, without re-entering the same job three times in three different tools. Every plan runs that same core loop; the higher tiers add automation, payment collection and two-way texting on top of it, not a different workflow.

The four Jobber plans at a glance

PlanMonthlyAnnualUsersAdds
Core $49/mo $29/mo 1 quoting, scheduling, invoicing: the baseline every plan runs on
Connect $139/mo $99/mo 5 QuickBooks sync, automated reminders & payment collection, time tracking
Grow $199/mo $149/mo 10 job costing, two-way SMS, optional line items (upsells), custom automations
Plus $499/mo $399/mo 15 AI Receptionist, Marketing Suite, Pipeline lead tracker, dedicated onboarding

Every plan adds $29/mo per extra user. Full plan-by-plan math, the 1-year commitment tier and what a growing crew actually pays: Jobber pricing breakdown.

Which trades run on Jobber

Jobber's four plans aren't split by trade: the same Core-to-Plus lineup covers lawn care, cleaning, HVAC, plumbing, electrical and similar home-service work, priced by user count rather than industry. Cleaning is the one trade with confirmed dedicated pages on Jobber's own site (dedicated cleaning & residential-cleaning industry pages) and we cover it in depth on the cleaning business software hub. For the other trades, Jobber runs as a general platform rather than a specialized tool: see how it fits HVAC, plumbing, electrical and lawn care businesses on their own trade pages.

Ratings and free trial

Jobber holds the same 4.6 average on both platforms we track (4.6 (1,362) on Capterra, 4.6 (478) on G2), the same score showing up on two independent sites rather than one strong number that doesn't repeat elsewhere. The free trial runs 14 days, full Grow access, no card, with full access to Grow-tier features like job costing and two-way SMS before you've picked or paid for a plan.

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Where Jobber wins, and where it doesn't

Against the other general, multi-trade platforms compared on this site, Jobber publishes the lowest starting price among vendors that publish one at all, Core at $29/month annual ($49/month billed monthly), and it's the only one that discloses its per-user fee on every plan, not just the top tier. Housecall Pro only publishes its extra-user fee on MAX ($35/mo; not published below MAX); Workiz, ServiceTitan and FieldPulse don't publish a base price at all.

The catch: that $29/mo per-seat fee never goes away, and it compounds once a crew outgrows a plan's included users: hire a few people past Connect's 5 seats and the monthly total can pass Grow's flat $199/month sticker price before you've noticed. See the full math on the pricing page. And on sheer review count, Housecall Pro pulls ahead (4.7 (2,700+) on Capterra versus Jobber's 4.6 (1,362)), even though Jobber's score holds flat at 4.6 across both Capterra and G2, a consistency Housecall Pro's own scores don't match (4.7 on Capterra versus 4.3 on G2).

For the full weigh-up (how the tiers hold up against real usage, exactly where the per-user math starts to bite, and who should look elsewhere first), read the Jobber review. If the seat fees don't fit your crew size, compare six real options in Jobber alternatives, or see Jobber head-to-head against its closest competitor in Jobber vs Housecall Pro.

Not sure it fits YOUR business? Answer a few questions about your trade, crew size and budget in the free Software Fit-Finder and get a straight recommendation, Jobber included only if it actually wins for your case.

Related reading

Jobber: common questions

What is Jobber used for?

Jobber runs the core workflow of a home-service business (quoting, scheduling, dispatching, invoicing and collecting payment) in one app instead of a calendar, an invoicing tool and a payment processor that don't talk to each other. It serves trades from lawn care to cleaning, HVAC, plumbing and electrical work, for teams from a single operator (Core, 1 user) up to roughly 15 people (Plus).

How much does Jobber cost?

Jobber runs $29 to $399/month across four plans on annual billing (or $49-$499/month billed monthly), plus $29/mo for each user past what a plan includes. Full plan-by-plan breakdown, including the 1-year commitment option, is on the Jobber pricing page.

Is Jobber legit?

Yes, Jobber publishes its pricing directly on its own site (verified July 2026) rather than gating it behind a sales call, and its ratings hold up across two independent platforms: 4.6 (1,362) on Capterra and 4.6 (478) on G2. See how we research for our verification method, and the full Jobber review for the honest verdict on fit.

Pricing and features change. Confirm current numbers on Jobber's own pricing page before you buy. This is independent analysis of Jobber's published pricing and third-party ratings (Capterra, G2), not advice from Jobber itself. Some links are affiliate links; they never affect our rankings or verdicts.

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